Pullet-Shut Door in Existing Coop

ryan820

Songster
10 Years
Dec 30, 2010
374
6
159
Colorado
My wife has been great about closing the coop at night-- she's done it without fail whatever night I'm not home, which is a lot as I work in the evening. We live on a property of a few acres near Denver and while my hobby is gardening, chicken keeping, homesteading and such, her's is traveling and who am I to keep her from her hobby? So we are away frequently, though not necessarily for long periods of time. This makes arranging house sitters and such a pain because we need them often and never for long.

With the addition of five more chickens this year-- four pullets and a roo of the silver-laced wyandotte variety-- the coop is a lot fuller now. I'm sure I'm maxed out on the number of birds this coop can handle! Anyway, the peeps went out into the coop two weekends ago and even survived some pretty chilly nights below freezing, and they took to the coop after only two nights of placing them there after dark. But the coop is full and chaos reigns in the morning before I can manage to get my butt out there to let them out. With a ton of trips planned this year, I thought to myself-- we need a door-- and automatic door. I did some research and looking around. My coop isn't big and so the door space can't require too much space. I found ones with the drapery motor as its acting mechanism but it required so much space above the actual door-- not cool. This seems to be the predominant door out there and all required so much space!!!!!!

It was on here, though, that I found out about the pullet-shut door. Its roughly the same size door opening for the coop but has a smaller, albeit weaker, motor, but it pivots instead of pulling up and down. Its smaller motor was a concern for me as we have some serious winds here in Colorado but they apparently do fine in such conditions. The door itself is also made of aluminum, not wood, like so many of the other varieties I found. Lastly, it is powered by a battery that is charged by a solar panel. I have power to my coop but the sun rises every day, and power through our wires doesn't always have the same reliability. Lastly, we got the optional light sensor. Still unsure how well this will work as it isn't something I can adjust but I'll try to place it in the sunniest spot possible so that it gives my chooks plenty of time to get into the coop at night and out of the coop at the first safe ray of sunlight in the morning. I can use the door without the light sensor but i'll have to adjust it for the season. I figure the light sensor will do that for me.

I ordered it over the weekend-- will report back on my experience, both with the door and the vendor. I should mention, I sent these guys an email over the weekend and within and hour or two they had replied with helpful information!
 
We have the pullet-shut door. It works great! We went with the line power version (rather than the solar). It still uses a battery and works even if the power is out; the line power is for a trickle charger that recharges the battery. We also have the light sensor. We couldn't be happier.

KJF
 
We have the pullet-shut door. It works great! We went with the line power version (rather than the solar). It still uses a battery and works even if the power is out; the line power is for a trickle charger that recharges the battery. We also have the light sensor. We couldn't be happier.

KJF
Have you any recommendations or best practices to share about the door, it's operation/installation? How about the light sensor? Is ten feet of wire enough? I was planing on connecting it to the unit and run it as high as possible directly above the coop.
 
Our coop is 4x8, with the pop door in the 4' end. I drilled small holes through the siding right by the motor to run the power wire and the light sensor wire inside the coop. I drilled another small hole in the front of the coop, about a foot below the roofline, through which I extended the light sensor, and caulked the holes. The sensor faces south, and has worked like a charm. The door doesn't close until dark (not at sunset, but dark). They told me if I want the door to close earlier, I could put the sensor on the east or north side. I have a light in the coop that turns on at dusk. That seems to help the chicks know its time to go inside. None have been caught outside yet when the door closes.

I have power in the coop. I built a small shelf up high on which the battery sits, next to the outlet into which I plugged the trickle charger.

I really like the design of this door. While it sounds like the guillotine style doors work for many, I would worry about something going wrong with the cords, pulleys and all. And, with the aluminum door and frame, I think a predator would have a hard time prying it open (assuming it got into the run in the first place).

So far (a couple of weeks now), this door has worked like a charm. I'm really glad we have it, both for morning and night. My schedule just doesn't match that of the hens. :rolleyes:

KJF
 
The door shipped Monday, as expected, which given it was ordered mid Saturday, I think, is pretty good. It was scheduled to arrived Thursday but FedEx updated that to tomorrow! I won't be able to do anything with it until Friday, most likely.

So far, I'm liking my pullet shut door experience.
 
Our coop is 4x8, with the pop door in the 4' end. I drilled small holes through the siding right by the motor to run the power wire and the light sensor wire inside the coop. I drilled another small hole in the front of the coop, about a foot below the roofline, through which I extended the light sensor, and caulked the holes. The sensor faces south, and has worked like a charm. The door doesn't close until dark (not at sunset, but dark). They told me if I want the door to close earlier, I could put the sensor on the east or north side. I have a light in the coop that turns on at dusk. That seems to help the chicks know its time to go inside. None have been caught outside yet when the door closes.

I have power in the coop. I built a small shelf up high on which the battery sits, next to the outlet into which I plugged the trickle charger.

I really like the design of this door. While it sounds like the guillotine style doors work for many, I would worry about something going wrong with the cords, pulleys and all. And, with the aluminum door and frame, I think a predator would have a hard time prying it open (assuming it got into the run in the first place).

So far (a couple of weeks now), this door has worked like a charm. I'm really glad we have it, both for morning and night. My schedule just doesn't match that of the hens. :rolleyes:

KJF


Great feedback! May I ask where you're located? Tapatalk, the app I use to surf this forum, doesn't show that info. I ask because I'm concerned about this doors ability to handle strong winds. In Colorado, especially atop hills, like the one my house is one, winds can be brutal. I think the winds are buffeted well by the fence around the coop but you never know when the right gust will come along and knock your socks off!
 

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